John Hopkins
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
But while passing through a village nestled in the mountains, they suddenly find themselves at the epicenter of a terrible natural disaster.
A magnitude 8 earthquake that will go down as one of the deadliest in human history.
When the restaurant they're sitting in collapses, Mayan is trapped in the pitch black, buried alive, and so badly injured she's unable to even call out for help.
Even as she fights to free herself from this living tomb, up above, on the surface, the situation is even worse.
Escaping burial is just the beginning.
That's next time on Real Survival Stories.
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It is a bright spring day in April 1581, at the Royal Docks at Deptford, on the banks of the River Thames, just outside London.
Monsieur de Marchemont, the French ambassador to the English court, alights from a carriage, richly dressed in a blue velvet doublet.
Shading his eyes, he takes in the enormous crowd that has gathered at the docks.
Not for him, but for the occupant of the vehicle ahead.
The door of the lead carriage now opens, and, to an almighty cheer, Elizabeth, Queen of England, emerges into the spring sunshine.
The light catches on the innumerable jewels stitched onto her scarlet gown, turning her distinctive red hair into a fiery halo, and she raises a gracious hand in acknowledgement of her subjects.
Hurrying to her side, he escorts her through the crowd, with her pale hand tucked into the crook of his elbow.
They head towards a sailing ship, sitting in the dry dock and draped with royal banners in shades of red, blue and gold.
It is the Golden Hind, freshly returned from a perilous three-year circumnavigation of the globe.
Marchmont guides Elizabeth along the wooden boards that have been laid over the stinking mud of the riverbank, to where a gangplank leads up to the ship itself.
A stately train of courtiers follow, and behind them the raucous mass of onlookers, eagerly pushing aboard the famous vessel.
Once Marchmont and Elizabeth are safely on the ship's deck, an ear-splitting crack sounds from behind them.